HANDS-ON Experience Learning
Basic Package of Support (BPS) for young South Africans
OPPORTUNITY
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Create new connections to opportunity for young people
LESSONS ON COLLABORATION: HOW A MULTI-STAKEHOLDER CONSORTIUM CO-CREATED THE BASIC PACKAGE OF SUPPORT (BPS) FOR YOUNG SOUTH AFRICANS
With support from the South African government and the European Union, a multi-stakeholder consortium developed and delivered the Basic Package of Support (BPS) for young South Africans in February 2022. In theory, many partners working together can produce a better result, but the process is not without its challenges. This learning brief will share some of the valuable lessons learned. More than three million young South Africans aged between 15 and 24 are not engaged in the job market or any form of education1. The Basic Package of Support (BPS) aims to change this with a multi-faceted, targeted and long-term approach to reconnect these young people and move them on to trajectories towards sustainable livelihoods2. The seed of the Basic Package of Support was planted in 2015 with the publication of the South African Child Gauge3, which focused on the possibility of breaking South Africa’s inter-generational transmission of poverty and inequality. This publication presented an idea that had not been trialled
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in South Africa before – wrap-around support to help young people navigate into independent adulthood. This concept gained widespread attention and, under the leadership of the Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit (SALDRU) at the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the Centre for Social Development in Africa (CSDA) at the University of Johannesburg (UJ), a coalition of partners4 in government, academia and civil society, began to conceptualise a more comprehensive approach to support South Africa’s youth. This eventually became known as the Basic Package of Support (BPS).
Stats.SA.2021. Quarterly Labour Force Survey (QLFS) of the 1st quarter of 2021 Access at: http://www.statssa.gov.za/?p=14415
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See this video for an explanation of the BPS.
The South African Child Gauge is an annual publication of the Children’s Institute, University of Cape Town. Partners included: the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) Africa; DG Murray Trust; The Western Cape Economic and Development Partnership; OpenUp; The Jobs Fund; and the Presidential Youth Employment Intervention (PYEI).
CREATE NEW CONNECTIONS TO OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
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“From the age of 18 onwards there is a real gap in support for young people, mostly because systems assume they will move quite smoothly through the schooling system into post-school and into the labour market. What we see, through survey data and qualitative work across the country, is that this isn’t the case at all. Most young people zigzag in and out, and keep churning through education and employment training without ever actually moving forward. And so, at that time, the recommendation of the Child Gauge was to look at a more comprehensive way of supporting young people.” Associate Professor Ariane De Lannoy, Chief Researcher at SALDRU, Principal Investigator of BPS
The DG Murray Trust (DGMT) led multiple engagements with civil society organisations working with young people Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEETs) to design the tools and processes needed for the BPS. Funding, provided by the European Union via the Capacity Building Programme for Employment Promotion (CBPEP)5 kickstarted the research and development phase.
According to the project partners, the following lessons kept the BPS ship from crashing on the rocks of dissention: 1) Build on solid evidence 2) Recognise each other’s strengths
The goal was to provide NEETs with support to increase their life chances, by proactively offering them a well-targeted package that:
3) Concentrate on relationship-building
helps them to understand available pathways [back] into education, training and work;
4) Adapt where necessary 5) Keep the shared vision front and centre
refers them to existing support services to connect to, take up and complete such pathways;
6) Solve collaboratively
connects them to employment, education and training opportunities; and
7) Learn as you go
keeps them connected to an opportunity over time through re-engagement when necessary. BUILD ON SOLID EVIDENCE
It took a long time for the BPS to gain recognition in government circles, but De Lannoy believes the evidence6 collected by SALDRU and CSDA could not be denied. “The proposal for this programme and the approach is built on solid evidence. As long as we keep that updated and keep bringing the same message based on the evidence, people can’t actually keep dismissing you.”
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Treasury.
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To take the concept of BPS from ideation to implementation was a complex task because of the variety of interests and stakeholders involved. From academic institutions, to NGOs to the Presidential Youth Employment Intervention (PYEI), all the stakeholders shared the same vision of using a new methodology to support young people, but they had different ideas as how best to achieve this. Ariane De Lannoy, Associate Professor and Chief Researcher at SALDRU, UCT, and Lauren Graham, Associate Professor and Director at the Centre for Social Development in Africa (CSDA), UJ, are the co-leads for the BPS.
CBPEP is based in the Government Technical Advisory Centre in the National
Graham, L; De Lannoy, A; Rosa, S; Breakey, J. Towards A Basic Package of Support in South Africa. Available here: http://opensaldru.uct.ac.za/handle/11090/969
CREATE NEW CONNECTIONS TO OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
BPS BENEFICIARIES
9 31%
65%
WITH MATRIC
84%
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The majority of 15- to 24-year-olds who are NEET in South Africa are female, black and live in urban areas.
LESS THAN MATRIC
ARE BLACK
61%
LIVE IN URBAN AREAS
EDUCATION
4%
50
%
MORE THAN MATRIC
WOMEN
Source: SALDRU and CSDA
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RECOGNISE EACH OTHER’S STRENGTHS
De Lannoy and Graham maintain that because they have been working together on the BPS for such a long time, they have become adept at allocating work streams that fall within their respective strengths, but also take turns keeping the ball in the air. De Lannoy explains: “Where we require quite a bit of diplomacy to move a piece forward, that piece lands with me. Whereas moments that needed firmer unblocking are Lauren’s strength”. DGMT’s experience of incubating and scaling youth development programmes supported the team in understanding how to approach implementation methodologies that could work for young people. Thus, DGMT became a crucial partner in developing and testing the coaching tools required to implement the BPS programme.
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CONCENTRATE ON RELATIONSHIP-BUILDING
The core BPS team (SALDRU, CSDA and DGMT) spent a lot of time on relationship-building, making sure that what the BPS has to offer benefits the different partners invested in it. Although there were serious questions raised about the BPS in the early phases, significant efforts had to be made to convince partners of its importance and to indicate how it aligned with, but was different from, other interventions that were being developed. Graham indicates that it was “when we stood firm on the significance of the project that we were able to clearly articulate how this programme differs from other programmes and where it fits in relations to others. [Then] we began to make headway.”
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ADAPT WHERE NECESSARY
It was initially anticipated that DGMT would incubate the project as it has many other youth programmes. However, at the time, DGMT did not have the capacity. Thus, SALDRU and CSDA agreed to take on the implementation role, with support from DGMT. That had pros and cons. The pro was that SALDRU and CSDA were directly involved in ensuring the BPS was rolled out in the way originally envisaged. The con was that neither UCT or UJ was set up for programme implementation – they are training and research institutions. Graham acknowledges that the mechanism of implementation has been challenging to figure out and that scaling up will be done by other organisations. “We certainly don’t see ourselves as being the core implementor going forward from a scale point of view. We are going to look at different models of implementation, one of which is a partnership, depending on the available funding.” How implementation looks going forward is part of the key collaborative work and DGMT plans to leverage its own learnings in building effective models for scale.
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KEEP THE SHARED VISION FRONT AND CENTRE
All parties involved shared the goal of securing a better future for young South Africans, so they constructively resolved most challenges and worked together to ensure the programme stayed the course. Close attention was paid to each work stream to make sure each piece could move forward. De Lannoy points out that it was also important to take moments to “step out of that nitty grittiness and remind ourselves of the longer-term vision and the bigger picture to make sure that we remain true to the integrity of the project.”
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DGMT’s continued involvement in the project is very much informed by the strategic alignment of its youth portfolio, and the clear vision that the BPS had put forward. Simone Peinke, BPS lead at DGMT, says: “It has always been relatively easy to motivate for why DGMT should remain involved with the BPS project, thanks to the project’s clearly articulated vision.”
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SOLVE COLLABORATIVELY
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The BPS team recognises that it is on a long-term learning trajectory. It is continually trialling and testing various approaches to learn what does or does not work. Sticking points are recognised and adjusted for. For example, the team learned that there was some initial confusion about whom the youth coaches implementing the BPS should report to. That process is currently being refined so that the lines of reporting are clear.
What has held back the work is the fact that different departments and programmes often work in silos, thinking in their own way to achieve their own programme outcomes. Wherever challenges were faced, De Lannoy asked partners to leave that behind and to really think about young people and their well-being as the ultimate outcomes. When hurdles cropped up, the BPS team consistently invited partners to solve these problems collaboratively and in this way the programme was able to progress.
“Rather than X number of young people in a job or X number in a training opportunity, what is really going to make things better for young people in the long run? And that is not easy, because everybody kind of needs to loosen up on their own identity a little bit and needs to recognise that a larger collaborative approach is the only way to get us there.” Associate Professor Ariane De Lannoy, Chief Researcher at SALDRU, Principal Investigator of BPS Bridget Hannah, DGMT Innovation Director: All Young People Get their First Decent Job, says DGMT has learned that meaningful collaborative participation often requires a dedicated resource with the capacity to spend time understanding the problem in order to effectively contribute solutions. DGMT paid close attention to the types of support that may best serve the project and then used its networks to pull that in. Examples of these include specialist consultants to support with quality assurance processes, or partner organisations specialising in particular services such as the National Association of Child Care Workers (NACCW).
LEARN AS YOU GO
“For DGMT the opportunity that sits before us with the BPS is how might we use an evidence-led approach to support young NEETs entering the world of work and study with a sense of hope and direction. How do we sustain economic livelihoods, so that we produce a model for youth development that is contextually relevant and promotes collective impact?” Bridget Hannah DGMT Innovation Director: All Young People Get their First Decent Job
GETTING READY TO PILOT THE BPS The first pilot of the BPS began implementation under the guidance of SALDRU in Atlantis in the Western Cape in February 2022. DGMT assisted with funding, recruiting the implementation manager and providing boots-on-the-ground support. The location was selected because 41% of young people in the area are NEET and because there is access to basic services. The goal is to reach 100 young people during the pilot. “It would just be really useful to understand in that particular context, how we can begin to shift things for young people,” observes Prof De Lannoy. Two more sites are planned for 2022: Orange Farm in Gauteng, where 40% of young people are NEET (led by CSDA), and eThekwini in KwaZulu-Natal, where 33% are NEET (led by SALDRU)7. The collaborative approach continues going forward – all youth coaches employed at the sites are child and youth care workers recruited in collaboration with the NACCW.
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The team has recently secured funding from the Innovation Fund, which means two more sites, Jabulani and Alexandra, in Gauteng are now in the pipeline. Additionally, there is also rural site scoping to understand how to adapt the programme for such a setting.
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CREATE NEW CONNECTIONS TO OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Currently, a case management system is being put into place across the sites. It registers participants and tracks a range of indicators over time. The objective is to see how young people progress, or not, over the course of the pilot implementation.
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HONESTY IS AN EFFECTIVE RUDDER The BPS ship has made its first port of call at Atlantis, but there is a long voyage ahead. The programme leads believe safe passage thus far is due to a common vision and clear, honest and consistent communication between coalition partners. De Lannoy advises: “Be honest about what you do and do not (yet) know. We don’t have all the answers yet. No one does. If anyone did, we would not be facing this huge NEET-youth crisis.”
This learning brief was developed by Daniella Horwitz
This is the learning experience of:
WWW.DGMT.CO.ZA
CREATE NEW CONNECTIONS TO OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
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